Search for a command to run...

Timestamps are as accurate as they can be but may be slightly off. We encourage you to listen to the full context.
Tim Berners-Lee, inventor of the World Wide Web, discusses the current state and future of his creation in this wide-ranging conversation. (02:38) The episode explores how the web has strayed from its original democratic vision, with power increasingly concentrated in big tech platforms and walled gardens. Tim shares his concerns about AI's impact on the web, from new browser wars to the breakdown of the web's social contract as AI companies extract data without permission. (26:27) However, he remains optimistic about solutions like his company Inrupt's work on decentralized data wallets and the Solid protocol, which aims to give users control over their personal data.
• Main themes: The tension between centralization and democratization of the web, AI's transformative impact on browsers and data extraction, and the need for user sovereignty over personal data in the digital age.
Sir Tim Berners-Lee is the inventor of the World Wide Web, having created HTML and HTTP protocols that form the foundation of the modern internet. (02:10) He founded the W3C web standards body and is currently co-founder and CTO of Inrupt, a decentralization startup focused on giving users control over their personal data. He has a new memoir titled "This Is For Everyone: The Unfinished Story of the World Wide Web."
Neil Patel is the Editor-in-Chief of The Verge and host of the Decoder podcast. He has built his entire career on the democratic publishing opportunities that the web provided, starting The Verge in 2011 as a major web-based publication. (05:47)
Berners-Lee acknowledges a fundamental shift where new content creators would likely choose closed platforms over open websites today. (06:05) The original vision of digital sovereignty - where anyone could create a website and be a peer with others on the web - has been eroded by platform monopolies. This represents a loss of individual agency and control over one's digital destiny, which was core to the web's founding principles.
When networks and markets combine, monopolies emerge inevitably according to Berners-Lee. (08:45) We now essentially have one dominant search engine, one social network, and one marketplace. This concentration of power creates problems for individuals trying to maintain control of their digital lives and professional destinies, highlighting the need for intentional intervention to preserve competition and choice.
For AI to effectively help individuals, it needs access to personal data that goes beyond what's publicly available on the web. (25:58) Berners-Lee's company Inrupt has developed "Charlie," an AI assistant that works with personal data stored in secure data wallets. This approach promises more powerful and personalized assistance while maintaining user control over sensitive information.
AI has solved the conversion problem that limited the semantic web's adoption - turning non-semantic data into machine-readable formats. (40:27) What couldn't be achieved through persuasion and voluntary adoption is now happening through AI's ability to extract meaning from any content. This creates new possibilities for AI-to-AI communication and data exchange in standardized formats.
Competition between different browser engines drives innovation more than just competing user experiences. (52:41) Currently, Chromium dominates as a near-monopoly, with only WebKit providing meaningful competition on iOS. Allowing true browser engine competition on mobile platforms could dramatically change the web's capabilities and reduce platform gatekeeping power.